Funniest tweets about Stephen Nedoroscik crushing the pommel horse

3 months ago 3

Many on social media applauded Nedoroscik for wearing his glasses during the men's team final, rather than opting to wear contact lenses.

PARIS, France — Stephen Nedoroscik did his job for the U.S. men’s gymnastics team at the Paris Olympics on Monday.

Nedoroscik, Team USA's pommel horse specialist, helped deliver a long-awaited win for the men's gymnastics team.

After a stunning routine that secured the bronze medal, Nedoroscik was seen celebrating with teammates while donning his glasses.

Many on social media applauded Nedoroscik for wearing his glasses during the men's team final, rather than opting to wear contact lenses. 

"Thanks for the glasses representation Stephen Nedoroscik," one user said.

Nedoroscik, the only specialist in the U.S. team, was even likened to Superman and his alter ego Clark Kent. 

Pommel horse is an apparatus the American men have historically struggled with, but Nedoroscik has loved it since childhood. He practiced on it for hours after his parents installed one in the backyard.

In 2021, Nedoroscik became the first U.S. gymnast to win a world championship gold medal on pommel horse.

Stephen Nedoroscik, the Clark Kent of pommel horse! 🫡🇺🇸 #ParisOlympics pic.twitter.com/1HfYFSbJvH

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) July 30, 2024

Stephen Nedoroscik on the sideline vs. Stephen Nedoroscik on the pommel horse pic.twitter.com/YUo5t9NBYs

— BetMGM 🦁 (@BetMGM) July 29, 2024

thanks for the glasses representation stephen nedoroscik https://t.co/YgfTNdDiIj

— dr dejo 🍫 (@sIaypill) July 29, 2024

Husbands and BFs on the sofas at Anthropologie pic.twitter.com/qE8NGgvekO

— Mina Kimes (@minakimes) July 29, 2024

mood pic.twitter.com/V4OlwMk0xh

— Penn State Men’s Gymnastics (@PennStateMGYM) July 29, 2024

Obsessed with this guy on the US men's gymnastics team who's only job is pommel horse, so he just sits there until he's activated like a sleeper agent, whips off his glasses like Clark Kent and does a pommel horse routine that helps deliver the team its first medal in 16 years. pic.twitter.com/0D1ZqJjFa1

— Megan 📚 (@MegWritesBooks) July 29, 2024

how your email finds me pic.twitter.com/NCFCdQK0Co

— alyssa (@alyssalerae) July 29, 2024

THE KINGGGGGGGGGG pic.twitter.com/qVJZDwpBoe

— whitney medworth (@its_whitney) July 29, 2024

“Hey babe what’re you doin?” Oh nothing really, just scrolling and liking every single tweet I see about our pommel horse king Stephen Nedoroscik 😭🤓 pic.twitter.com/mjtIv5QZTM

— trisaratops (@SaraMichalowicz) July 30, 2024

People who aren't nerds don't understand how long we've been waiting for an electrical engineer from Pennsylvania POMMEL THE HELL OUT OF A HORSE. https://t.co/QLSlSDtMbk

— John Green (@sportswithjohn) July 29, 2024

Hey Stephen (Olympics Version) #ParisOlympics pic.twitter.com/bCbh9ZVzcd

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) July 30, 2024

To truly understand Stephen Nedoroscik's nerd credentials, you need to know that he is in Paris for the Olympics and posting to his insta story about solving a rubik's cube in under 10 seconds. pic.twitter.com/2vFygJBifW

— John Green (@sportswithjohn) July 29, 2024

stephen nedoroscik hearing it’s finally time for pommel horsepic.twitter.com/Bkzvo8qODH

— syd reynolds (@sydreyn2) July 29, 2024

me liking every tweet about Steve the pommel horse hero and his glasses pic.twitter.com/kQhyRDMVKV

— Jamie Han (@jamiehan) July 29, 2024

After qualifying in fifth place, the U.S. men ended a 16-year drought to the delight of the dozens of fans waving American flags who chanted “USA, USA” throughout the evening.

Nedoroscik did not wear his glasses during Monday's stunning routine on the pommel horse, but the two-time NCAA champion from Penn State is known for wearing his "sport goggles" during competitions.

The sports goggles aren't actually to improve his eyesight as he uses them for comfort and superstitious reasons, according to his Olympic profile.

“They’re more for show than anything,” he said. “They don’t have prescription in them."

The goggles have yet to make their Olympic debut. 

"We’ll see if they make an appearance in one of the next couple of competitions I have," the Olympian said on Saturday.

The sports goggles were the result of a secret Santa gift from a teammate at Penn State, according to the Boston Globe.

just pommel horse left, you know what that means... pic.twitter.com/xtWX49hNGT

— USA Gymnastics (@USAGym) July 29, 2024

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